By Gary Lachman

When speaking of the life and work of Rudolf Steiner, the greatest challenge is to express it in general terms. Gary Lachman has done just that. The other challenge for those who know Rudolph Steiner’s work is to speak of it in an unbiased way. Gary Lachman invites you to know Rudolf Steiner in his humanity; a man who had one foot on this earth and the other in the spiritual world that weaves through every physical Higgs boson particle.

At the core of Rudolf Steiner’s teaching lies the principle of metamorphosis. He invites us to observe and think deeply about the form-changing process we can observe in nature and apply that to human evolution. Gary Lachman uses this same principle to reveal the life of Rudolf Steiner through the pages of his book. Steiner himself wrote in his autobiography that its purpose was to “trace the course of his thought and to show how it evolved over time.” Yet many of his followers today embalm the Steiner they think he was in the ideas of a century ago when he lived.

One of the key principles to change is the encounter with a force of resistance. Through the journey that Gary sketches we come to understand that at every turn in his life Rudolf Steiner met with resistance in one form or another, both from without and from within his organization. He still does today. Why wouldn’t such a significant thinker be as well-known as Einstein? Einstein! the one whose theories do not metamorphose into modern scientific thought as well as he may have hoped. On the back cover of Gary’s book we read, “Rudolf Steiner — educator, architect, philosopher and agriculturist — ranks amongst the most creative and prolific figures of the early twentieth century. Yet he remains a mystery to most people.”

What Gary Lachman has written in this biography goes a long way to unraveling this mystery. Steiner wanted to find ways of expressing with utmost clarity what he called “the living activity of the human spirit.” Gary explains that from an early age Steiner was aware of things “seen” and things “not seen.” The things “not seen,” meaning not grasped by the senses, weren’t fantasies, or what we’d call “mere imagination.” They were inner events taking place on a kind of interior stage, the soul.” Gary says that “Rudolf Steiner talks about the visual world as a tapestry behind which is a great work.”

Gary Lachman has done his homework; he has read enough of Steiner’s work to reveal “the very core of Rudolf Steiner’s teachings and visions,” as Peter Mollenhauer puts it in his Introduction to The Principle of Spiritual Economy: “… four basic facts govern human evolution from prehistoric times to the present. First, humanity has evolved as a result of the dialectics between forces and counterforces in the spiritual world. Second, earthly lives are repeated in a variety of spiritual ways, and valuable components are preserved for later use. Third, evolutionary forces have changed human consciousness, and new soul qualities are developed at certain intervals. Finally, the Mystery of Golgotha is the centerpiece of human evolution, but the influence of Christ-Impulse was manifest long before the birth of Jesus and can be observed in individualities such as Buddha, Zarathustra, and Moses.” (read this lecture series at, http://wn.rsarchive.org/Lectures/GA109/English/AP1986/PrSpEc_intro.html)

At the end of his book Gary says, “More than any other spiritual or esoteric thinker, the practical application of Steiner’s ideas has had a remarkable success, and there is little evidence that this will change in the near future. Indeed the opposite is more likely.

“Steiner, I think, could only be pleased to see this. And, if he is still occupying those transitional realms between ‘death and rebirth’ and is at all aware of what he has made possible, he could not be blamed for experiencing a sense of satisfaction, however briefly he would let itself enjoy it.”

Anyone wishing to understand who this remarkable man was and how his ideas have already changed society and will continue to do so into the future will be well rewarded by reading Gary Lachman’s, Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work. — Review by Kristina Kaine.

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